Despatch to London.
Minutes (3), Other documents (3), Marginalia (1).
This document contains mentions of Indigenous Peoples. The authors of these documents
often perpetuate a negative perspective of Indigenous Peoples and it is important
to look critically at these mentions. They sometimes use terminology that is now considered
hurtful and offensive. To learn more about modern terminology pertaining to Indigenous
Peoples, Indigenous ways of knowing, and decolonization, please refer to the Glossary of terms.
Douglas requests that more men be sent from England to survey the boundary along the 49th
parallel. His reasons are that the survey will exhaust his small labour pool and increase
the rate of wages in the colony.
Enclosed is a draft from the CO to the FO with a copy of Douglas’s despatch and a copy for the Under-secretary at War; and a draft reply from Stanley to Douglas informing him that it has been decided to send fifty sappers instead of thirty.
1. I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of Mr
Merivale's letter of the 24th December
last,
1
I was obliged to write privately & in haste, to catch a mail. HM.
informing me that the letter from the War Department, respecting the
despatch of the party for exploring the line on the 49th parallel of
latitude, between the British and Americanpossessions
possessions
2
was written from unavoidable circumstances, too late for communication to
the Colonial Office, in the ordinary manner, and that it should be
regarded as addressed to me, with your concurrence.
2. Your instructions in respect to the objects contemplated
in that letter shall be implicitly attended to, and I will take
measures at an early day, to provide accommodations for the party
on Vancouver's Island, as suggested by Lord
Panmure,
and otherwise to advise the Chief Commissioner regarding the best method
of carrying out the instructions of Her Majesty's Government, so faras
as respects the means of transport for his provisions and stores,
and the obtaining of local labor.
3. There being a great scarcity of laborers in this country
at present, and wages consequently running very high; Mechanics
refusing employment at any thing under 12/6, and common laborers 5/-
a day, besides their food; it being moreover not improbable that
the demand for so many additional hands, as will be required in
exploring the Boundary Line may have the effect of raising the
present rate of labor; I would therefore suggest for your consideration
whether it would not be advisable in those circumstancesto to send
out a greater number of men from England, than the 30 non-Commissioned
Officers and men, mentioned in Mr Hawes' letter.
4. By pursuing that course there would not be so great a drain
of labor from this Colony; wages would be kept within reasonable
bounds, and what is of far more importance to the public service,
the Chief Commissioner would be in a measure independent of local
labor, and enabled to carry out the views of Her Majesty's Government
in respect to the Boundary Line with such aid, chiefly native Indians,
as can at all times be procured in this Colony.
5. I would not advise the exclusive employment of Indian labor
in tracing the boundary line;but but I think with a body of 60 white
men as a nucleus, and for the purpose of maintaining a proper
supervision and control, we could under any probable circumstances,
by the employment of Indian labourers, even in the event of the not
unlikely contingency of the whole floating white population of
Vancouver's Island, leaving the Colony for the gold mines, make up
a party of the requisite force to complete the boundary Survey.
I have the honor to be Sir
Your most obuedient humble Servant
James Douglas
Governor
The RightHonbleHenry Labouchere
Her Majesty's principal Secretary of State For the Colonial Department.
Minutes by CO staff
War Dt L[ithographed] F[orm] and the F.O.—I think.
= Merivale to Douglas, REs
The letter from the War Department (Benjamin Hawes to Douglas, 24
December 1857) is in Hawes to Merivale (Permanent Under-Secretary), 30 December 1857, 11734, CO 305/8,
p. 358, informing Douglas that a detachment of thirty
Royal Engineers are being sent to survey the Oregon boundary.
The boundary east of the continental divide had been established by a
convention signed in 1818, which agreed to allow the territory west of
the Rockies to be occupied jointly by nationals of both countries for a
period of ten years, without prejudice as to the eventual ownership of
this area. This agreement was renewed on an indefinite basis in 1827,
and by a treaty signed at Washington on 15 June 1846, both countries
agreed to fix the boundary at the forty-ninth parallel from the
continental divide to the main channel leading to the Straits of Juan de
Fuca and the Pacific Ocean. The need to survey this boundary led to
the establishment of a joint boundary commission, headed by Archibald
Campbell of the United States and Capt. John Summerfield Hawkins, R.E. of
Great Britain. Hawkins left England with his detachment on 2 April and
arrived at Esquimalt on 12 July 1858, by which time the discovery of
gold on the Fraser and Thompson rivers made the clear demarcation of the
boundary even more urgent. See Labouchere to Douglas, 23 January 1858, No. 3, CO 410/1, p. 119; George F.G. Stanley, ed.,
Mapping the Frontier: Charles Wilson's Diary of the Survey of
the 49th Parallel, 1858-1862, While Secretary of the British Boundary
Commission (Toronto: Macmillan, 1970). Cf Douglas to Labouchere, 6 April 1858, No. 15, 5180,
CO 305/9, p. 61 for Satellite.
Swan notes original treaty is preserved in PRO: SP 108.